ATO Interpretative Decision

ATO ID 2001/758

Fringe Benefits Tax

Fringe Benefits Tax - Recipients Contribution
FOI status: may be released
CAUTION: This is an edited and summarised record of a Tax Office decision. This record is not published as a form of advice. It is being made available for your inspection to meet FOI requirements, because it may be used by an officer in making another decision.

This ATOID provides you with the following level of protection:

If you reasonably apply this decision in good faith to your own circumstances (which are not materially different from those described in the decision), and the decision is later found to be incorrect you will not be liable to pay any penalty or interest. However, you will be required to pay any underpaid tax (or repay any over-claimed credit, grant or benefit), provided the time limits under the law allow it. If you do intend to apply this decision to your own circumstances, you will need to ensure that the relevant provisions referred to in the decision have not been amended or repealed. You may wish to obtain further advice from the Tax Office or from a professional adviser.

Issue

Whether an employer who pays the income tax liability of an expatriate employee is able to treat the employee's income tax refund as a "recipient's contribution" under subsection 136(1) of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986 (FBTAA).

Decision

No. A refund of the expatriate employee's income tax, paid by the employer, is not a "recipients contribution" under subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA. However, the refund will reduce the taxable value of the residual fringe benefit that arose from the payment of the employee's income tax under section 50 of the FBTAA.

Facts

The employer was the host entity of a number of expatriate employees.

The expatriate employees were remunerated on a net salary basis with the host entity paying the employee's income tax obligations.

A formal agreement with the expatriate employees provided for income tax refunds to be returned to the host entity.

No tax instalments were deducted from salary paid to the expatriate employee, but provisional tax instalments were paid.

The employer received an income tax refund from the final income tax return lodged by the expatriate employee.

Reasons for Decision

The term "recipients contribution" is defined in subsection 136(1) of the FBTAA as the amount of any consideration paid to the employer in respect of the provision of the recipients benefit.

A refund resulted from the lodgement of the final income tax return of the employee as the provisional tax instalments paid exceeded the employee's income tax liability for the year. The refund does not constitute consideration paid by the employee to the employer, so it will not be a "recipients contribution".

However, the income tax refund will reduce the taxable value of the residual fringe benefit that arose from the payment of the employee's income tax liability under section 50 of the FBTAA.

Amendment History

Date of Amendment Part Comment
6 April 2018 Title, Issue Minor punctuation and formatting amendments

Date of decision:  2 November 2001

Year of income:  Year ended 31 March 1998

Legislative References:
Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986
   subsection 136(1)
   section 50

Keywords
Fringe benefits tax
Expense payment fringe benefits
Residual fringe benefits
Double tax agreements
Objections
Overseas employees

Siebel/TDMS Reference Number:  DW248203; 1-7T0KWZX; 1-DXN78WM

Business Line:  Private Groups and High Wealth Individuals

Date of publication:  6 December 2001
Date reviewed:  12 March 2018

ISSN: 1445-2782


Copyright notice

© Australian Taxation Office for the Commonwealth of Australia

You are free to copy, adapt, modify, transmit and distribute material on this website as you wish (but not in any way that suggests the ATO or the Commonwealth endorses you or any of your services or products).